Saturday, January 1, 2011

Thomas Keller Oreos and 2010 Reflections

Alec and Nina hosted a Guilty Pleasures New Year's Eve party, requesting that we buy or prepare one of our guilty pleasures to share throughout the evening...something we don't care to admit we eat too often. Imagine Popeye's chicken and biscuits, Mac-n-Cheese (Alec prepared Alton Brown's version), HotPockets (Nina's gourmet version), nachos (John's "Barrack Nachos" in the bag), Velveeta Chili Dip, peanut butter truffles (Thomas Keller style), pizza, popcorn, and Bugles, washed down with lots of wine and champagne, and you'll appreciate the fact this was a great way to end 2010 and a swift kick in the butt jump start to the dreaded New Year's DIET!

Several weaknesses came to mind, including doughnuts, pasta, and Oreo cookies. I decided on Oreos, but not just any Oreos. I've never had them before, but Thomas Keller's Bouchon Bakery apparently sells TKOs (Thomas Keller Oreos). Oreos are one of Keller's favorite snacks, and are reinterpreted at Bouchon Bakery using chocolate sable dough and sweet white chocolate ganache filling.

Addendum: I'm now editing this post slightly because I did find a recipe for Chocolate Shortbread Cookies in Keller's Ad Hoc at Home. The ingredients and quantities are the same as the chocolate sable recipe posted for the TKO cookies, but the method is slightly different (cutting the cookies to 1/4 inch thickness rather than 1/8 inch, and chilling vs. not chilling the dough). When I make these again, and I will be making these again, I think cutting to 1/4 inch thickness and chilling the dough is the preferred method.

Thomas Keller Oreo Cookies aka TKOs

Slightly adapted from recipes posted on the web and from Ad Hoc at HomeMakes about 18, 2-inch round sandwiched oreo cookies

To prepare the filling, coarsely chop white chocolate and place in a medium bowl. In a small saucepan, over medium heat, bring cream to a boil. Pour hot cream over chocolate and allow to sit for one minute. Whisk together until all the chocolate is melted. Cover with plastic wrap, and allow to thicken for 5-6 hours.

Combine the sugar, flour, cocoa powder, baking soda, and salt in the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with a paddle attachment. With the mixer on low speed, add the butter, a few pieces at a time. The dough will have a sandy texture, then form pebble-size pieces. Continue mixing until the dough just starts to cling to the paddle and no longer looks dry. Do not wait for it to form a solid mass.

Turn the dough out onto a board and use the heel of your hand or a pastry scraper to bring the dough together. Shape into a block about 5 x 7 inches. Wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate for 1 hour (the dough can be refrigerated for up to 5 days or frozen for up to 2 weeks; defrost frozen dough overnight in the refrigerator).

Cut the block in half. One at a time, roll each piece of dough out between two pieces of parchment paper to 1/4 inch thick. Remove the top piece of parchment paper and reserve. Using a 2 inch round cookie cutter, cut out rounds and place on the baking sheets about 1 inch apart. Cover with reserved parchment, slide onto a baking sheet, and place in the refrigerator for about 15 minutes.

Position oven racks in the lower and upper thirds of the oven. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Prepare two baking sheets by lining them with parchment paper or Silpats.

Remove the cookies from the refrigerator. Take off the top sheet of parchment paper. Using a small offset spatula, transfer the cookies to the baking sheets, spacing them about 1 inch apart. Bake the cookies for about 10-12 minutes, rotating the sheets halfway through baking time.

Remove sheets from the oven and let cool on wire racks for a few minutes, then carefully transfer cookies directly to wire racks and let finish cooling.

Whisk the white chocolate ganache briefly and transfer it into a piping bag fitted with a small round tip for easier and cleaner filling of the cookies. Match up two cookie halves by size and pipe a small amount of ganache in the center of one half. Press the other half gently over the top until the ganache spreads out to the edge. Don't overfill as the ganache will ooze out.

Serve with a large glass of milk, or wine, or champagne.

If not totally devoured within two hours of baking, the cookies can be stored in an airtight container for up to 2-3 days.

I had high expectations for these TKOs, and they did rise to the occasion. But I've got to tell you, after tasting Nina's Thomas Keller Peanut Butter Truffles, I may have a new guilty pleasure for 2011.

5 comments:

That's a pretty incredible Oreo...wow! Too bad I didn't see this recipe before now. No more goodies for me for a few months. :( I loved your recap video and thank you for including the Bunkycooks.:) We sure wish we could see you and John at some point soon! Maybe in the New Year...I will keep my fingers crossed!

We wish you both the best in 2011! I think good things are coming our way!!

Happy New Year, Denise! The moment I saw the name Thomas Keller, I knew this was going to be a goodie. Who would ever think TK would conquer oreos? Well, no doubt they are the best tasting oreo's ever! BTW, saw your stollen in the DK forum, and wow, most gorgeous stollen ever!

On another note, I heard that Christina Tosi's pistachio cake was just so so, the milk crumbles being the best part. However, when her cookbook comes out, I'll be all over it in a nano second :)